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Arming the Elephant

Hafizzz

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Arming the Elephant | Stagecraft and Statecraft

The rise in US arms sales to India is being widely cited as evidence of the two countries' deepening defense relationship. But the long-term sustainability of the relationship, in which India is more a client than a partner, remains a deep concern for Indians. Does the recently issued Joint Declaration on Defense Cooperation, which establishes intent to move beyond weapons sales to the co-production of military hardware,mark a turning point, or is it merely a contrivance to placate India?

The factors driving the strategic relationship's development are obvious. Since 2006, bilateral trade has quadrupled, reaching roughly $100 billion this year. And, over the last decade, US defense exports to India have skyrocketed from just $100 million to billions of dollars annually.

With US military spending slowing and other export markets remaining tight, American defense firms are eager to expand sales to India, which is now the world's largest arms importer. And the political environment is amenable to their plans: India now conducts more joint military exercises with the US than with any other country.

For the US, displacing Russia as India's leading arms supplier was a major diplomatic triumph, akin to Egypt's decision during the Cold War to shift its allegiance – and its arms supplier – from the Soviet Union to America. The difference is that India can actually pay for the weapons that it acquires.

And the bills are substantial. In recent years, India has ordered American arms worth roughly $9 billion. It is now purchasing additional US weapons systems – 22 Apache attack helicopters, six C-130J turbo military transport aircraft, 15 Chinook heavy-lift helicopters, and 145 M-777 ultra-light howitzers – worth $5 billion. The value of India's arms contracts with US firms exceeds that of American military aid to any country except Israel.

Nirupama Rao, India's ambassador to the US, has called such defense transactions "the new frontier" in US-India relations and "a very promising one at that." But, while it is certainly a positive development for the US, for India, it represents a new frontier of dependency.

The problem is that India's defense sector has virtually nothing that it can sell to the US. The country has yet to develop a credible armament-production base like that of, say, Japan, which is co-developing advanced weapons systems with the US. In fact, India depends on imports – not only from major suppliers like the US and Russia, but also from Israel, the world's sixth-largest arms exporter – to meet even basic defense needs.

Moreover, India's leaders have not leveraged the bargaining power afforded by its massive arms purchases to advance national interests. They could, for example, try to persuade the US to stop selling arms to Pakistan, or secure better access to the American market for India's highly competitive IT and pharmaceutical sectors, which are facing new US non-tariff barriers.

Applying the recent declaration on defense cooperation will not be easy. For example, efforts to identify specific opportunities for collaborative weapons-related projects are to be pursued in accordance with "national policies and procedures." But the two sides cannot truly "place each other at the same level as their closest partners" unless national policies and procedures – especially in the US – evolve sufficiently.

Similarly, the declaration merely reiterates America's position that it supports India's "full membership" in the four US-led technology-control regimes: the Wassenaar Arrangement, the Nuclear Suppliers Group, the Missile Technology Control Regime, and the Australia Group. Given that US policy is to deny sensitive technologies to those outside these regimes, India's admission would make all the difference in facilitating technology sharing. But the declaration does not include any commitment from the US to expedite India's admission.

All of this suggests that the US is pandering to India's desire for a more equal defense relationship. It is willing to co-produce with India some smaller defensive systems, such as Javelin anti-tank missiles, in order to pave the way for more multi-billion-dollar deals for US-made systems. The Indian media are doing their part to strengthen the illusion of progress, latching onto the phrase "closest partners" in their acclaim for the agreement.

The irony is that, while America's pursuit of a stronger defense relationship with India is aimed largely at offsetting an increasingly assertive China, US President Barack Obama has charted a neutral course in Sino-Indian disputes. For example, the US has declined to hold joint military exercises in the northeastern Indian state of Arunachal Pradesh, which China has claimed as "South Tibet" since 2006.

As it stands, the US sells mainly defensive weapons systems to India, while Russia, for example, offers India offensive weapons, including strategic bombers, an aircraft carrier, and a lease on a nuclear submarine. Would the US be willing to sell India offensive weapons – including high-precision conventional arms, anti-submarine systems, and long-range air- and sea-launched cruise missiles – that could help to deter Chinese military preemption?

As US-India defense cooperation broadens, this question will loom ever larger
 
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Its no secret that whenever Congress has been in power, India maintains "friendly" relations with US.Unfortunately congress has been in power for almost a decade now.So this is really no news.


Hafizzz said:
The problem is that India's defense sector has virtually nothing that it can sell to the US.
Why was this sentence given extra weightage (by making it xxxtraa big in size)????Now how sarcastic is that???

Hafizzz get over your fascination for India.:dirol:
 
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Because many Indians here wear glasses and that sentence was given extra size so Indians here would not miss it.

Then Hafizzz its time you got your eyes tested.
Did you miss this line by any chance???
Hafizzz said:
The difference is that India can actually pay for the weapons that it acquires.
That should have been the tocsin ding for you.:partay:
 
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BS article.
1. India can't replace Russia for atleast next 25-30 years. Also no one but 'only' India itself can replace Russia.

2. India is no Pakistan. Even if we signed some defence deals with USA, we got nuclear agreement in return along with weapons on time.(win win for both, unlike in case of Pakistan which could have got anything in return of partnering with US on WOT but alas bad diplomacy).

3. We have bought $16 Billion weapons from Russia in last 3 years alone while more than $40 Billions worth weapons/nuclear reactor deals are confirmed to be signed in next 6-7 years.

4. As the article says itself, India buys only defensive weapons from US while Offensive weapons from Russia/France(eg- fighter jets). And there is a reason for that.

5. This BS article is saying that USA won't provide weapons like sea-launched cruise missile. I mean seriously??? We already have the best...'Brahmos'.

6. Again wrongly written that USA haven't provided anti-submarine systems to India. What is P-8I then???

All in all its a complete failure and BS from whosoever is the writer.
 
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BS article.
1. India can't replace Russia for atleast next 25-30 years. Also no one but 'only' India itself can replace Russia.

2. India is no Pakistan. Even if we signed some defence deals with USA, we got nuclear agreement in return along with weapons on time.(win win for both, unlike in case of Pakistan which could have got anything in return of partnering with US on WOT but alas bad diplomacy).

3. We have bought $16 Billion weapons from Russia in last 3 years alone while more than $40 Billions worth weapons/nuclear reactor deals are confirmed to be signed in next 6-7 years.

4. As the article says itself, India buys only defensive weapons from US while Offensive weapons from Russia/France(eg- fighter jets). And there is a reason for that.

5. This BS article is saying that USA won't provide weapons like sea-launched cruise missile. I mean seriously??? We already have the best...'Brahmos'.

6. Again wrongly written that USA haven't provided anti-submarine systems to India. What is P-8I then???

All in all its a complete failure and BS from whosoever is the writer.


Brahma Chellaney - Project Syndicate
The author is an Indian :

67e2a98e9348513e60f11393c235650b.square.png


Brahma Chellaney
Brahma Chellaney, Professor of Strategic Studies at the New Delhi-based Center for Policy Research, is the author of Asian Juggernaut, Water: Asia’s New Battleground, and Water, Peace, and War: Confronting the Global Water Crisis.
 
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Brahma Chellaney - Project Syndicate
The author is an Indian :

67e2a98e9348513e60f11393c235650b.square.png


Brahma Chellaney
Brahma Chellaney, Professor of Strategic Studies at the New Delhi-based Center for Policy Research, is the author of Asian Juggernaut, Water: Asia’s New Battleground, and Water, Peace, and War: Confronting the Global Water Crisis.
Doesn't matter if he is an Indian or Foreigner. He failed completely with lots of wrong facts(as I have pointed out in previous post).
 
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Doesn't matter if he is an Indian or Foreigner. He failed completely with lots of wrong facts(as I have pointed out in previous post).

He is an Indian Professor...how could he be using "wrong facts" ??? Alarm Bell rings
over the quality of Indian education.
 
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He is an Indian Professor...how could he be using "wrong facts" ??? Alarm Bell rings
over the quality of Indian education.
Quality is surely been compramised. Still better than Pakistan's as USA did everything with the help of you guys and in return gave you 'Baba Ji ka thullu'. Hahaha
 
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He is an Indian Professor...how could he be using "wrong facts" ??? Alarm Bell rings
over the quality of Indian education.

No, our system is good, but that professor looks like an idiot. Any one of us can easily point out what @kaykay has, he didnt mention it all though...
 
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The problem is that India's defense sector has virtually nothing that it can sell to the US.
So Mr Hafizzzzzz (or whatever your name is) why have you put this part in bold and large size? What's the big deal if India isn't exporting arms to the US? Why are you getting an orgasm?  
Because many Indians here wear glasses and that sentence was given extra size so Indians here would not miss it.
Instead you need glasses to look for your brain cells that seem to be lost in the vacuum between your ears. Sheeesh, man. Grow up!
 
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